Digging Into the WikiLeaks Cables 810
A number of readers have sent in new WikiLeaks stories today, many of which focus on the content of the leaked diplomatic cables. The documents showed how the US government bullied and manipulated other countries to gain support for its Copenhagen climate treaty (though behavior from the US wasn't all negative), how copyright negotiations largely meet the expectations of critics like Michael Geist, and how Intel threatened to move jobs out of Russia if the Russian government didn't loosen encryption regulations. Perhaps the biggest new piece of information is a list of facilities the US considers 'vital to security.' Meanwhile, the drama surrounding WikiLeaks continues; Julian Assange's Swiss bank account has been frozen and the UK has received an arrest warrant for the man himself; the effort to mirror the site has gained support from Pirate Parties in Australia, in the UK and elsewhere; and PayPal was hit with a DDoS for their decision not to accept donations for WikiLeaks.
Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Interesting)
...don't seem to understand that the takedown of Wikileaks is a triumph of world government. It's literally the new world order responding to a threat and removing it. And they're cheering it on...
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Insightful)
They really started to put the heat on wikileaks when Julian threatened to release information about banks. When he was attacking the puppets, there was mild outrage. Now that he is going after the puppet masters, he's a dead man.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:4, Funny)
Which is why it kind of baffles me that he's taking refuge in Switzerland, of all places.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:4, Informative)
dont think so, (Score:5, Insightful)
wikileaks has been removing the names from the documents up till this point. if, anyone does something against him, it will be 'springtime with agents in middle east' or something
Re:dont think so, (Score:4, Interesting)
I hope so. But my country has a prideful streak, and a history of "not negotiating with terrorists." The powers that be may figure, as long as Julian is alive, this information could come out anyway. They may decide that this cat is already out of the bag. If they do think that, an obvious response would be aimed not at stopping wikileaks, but at sending a message to any others out there that are thinking of doing the same thing: publish leaks, end up dead.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Insightful)
You're confusing "world government" with a situation in which multiple governments around the world happen to have similar interests in being able to communicate, diplomatically, without every cable being broadcast by an attention whore with a poltical agenda. That's neither a conservative or liberal thing. It's a practical reality thing. Even diplomats who might side with Assange's politics are pissed at his willingness to burn the house down in order to get rid of a rat.
Nations have to be able to communicate with each other off the public record on some matters. Assange even seems to agree on this, but he thinks that he should be the one to decide on which matters, when, and between which parties. Finding that to be the unctuous, unilateral posturing that it is is neither a conservative thing nor a world government thing. It's common freakin' sense.
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Kind of like when the state governments in the U. S. happen to have similar interests in being able to communicate, right?
To think about it another way (Score:5, Insightful)
So you ever have candid conversations with coworkers, friends, your spouse and so on about other people? Conversations where you drop pretense, say what you really think, what you really mean. Do you find that these conversations are often beneficial? Now, would you still have that same kind of conversation if you know it would be given, verbatim, to the person(s) you were talking about?
There you go then.
As an example when we get a new student in at work, I've explained to them on various occasions when they were going to be dealing with someone who was an asshole, or someone who is incapable of following simple directions, and so on. I couldn't have those conversations if the person was listening in. I mean there isn't any way I could let a student know they are dealing with an asshole, no matter how diplomatic I was the asshole would get mad. It is important that I can have a candid conversation with the students about this, it makes them able to do their job more effectively. But I couldn't do it if I had to record my conversations and hand them over to the parties involved.
Also it appears that Assanage doesn't want to acknowledge this. He was asked a very good, pointed, question in regards to this (http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/robertcolvile/100066669/is-julian-assange-a-coward-or-a-hypocrite/). Rather than provide a defense, give reasons why he feels that the good of his actions outweigh the harm, he just blows it off angrily because he doesn't like the question. Seems like he isn't willing to consider the consequences, the downside of his actions (all actions have a downside, everything has a cost).
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Re:To think about it another way (Score:5, Insightful)
I couldn't have those conversations if the person was listening in. I mean there isn't any way I could let a student know they are dealing with an asshole, no matter how diplomatic I was the asshole would get mad. It is important that I can have a candid conversation with the students about this, it makes them able to do their job more effectively. But I couldn't do it if I had to record my conversations and hand them over to the parties involved.
In that case, then, you really shouldn't do it. Not only is it potentially harmful, but you're causing your biases to flow downward onto every new employee you're responsible for training. Further, you're just some schmoe and not an entire government. With the size and importance of the organization increasing, so does the responsibility.
We need to develop a means of governing without secrets. Period.
It is genuinely the only way to survive the coming age. We're in the midst of an information renaissance, and Wikileaks is simply ahead of it's time. Our entire culture will adapt to the notion that you could be being watched. This might hopefully lead us into an era where we can be more honest with each other, especially at the political level.
Re:To think about it another way (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason you're afraid of having your opinions exposed is because you can't back them up, they are subjective, so you're more comfortable saying them in a situation where you think they won't come out and be challenged. In other words, you're a coward.
Re:To think about it another way (Score:4)
You and Assange, et al live in nice white ivory towers. In the real world, you have to work with difficult people, and helping others do it without making life with those difficult people worse is valuable, not only to the immediately affected people, but to everyone depending on them as well.
Re:To think about it another way (Score:5, Insightful)
Guess what, even if what he did was stupid and irresponsible, he didn't commit any crimes. Not any crimes that have been successfully prosecuted in the US anyway. He's not an American citizen, so he didn't commit treason. He never signed a security briefing, so he isn't bound to report and debrief if he receives classified material, he never accessed material he didn't have clearance for (it was sent to him, illegally, by someone who did have the clearance). The only thing he did, is exactly what every mainstream media does when they receive a leaked, classified document. He reviewed the information to determine if it was worth disclosing, discussed it with other media outlets with more expertise, and released it to the public. Exactly the same way that the AP, Reuters, CNN, Fox News, or the BBC would do.
So, stupid and irresponsible probably. Deserves what he's getting, sorry, but no.
Re:To think about it another way (Score:5, Insightful)
The analogy is flawed because governments are not private individuals. As an individual, you have an essential right to keep secrets: it's called privacy, and it's critical for liberty. Yes, I have the right to hide even if i didn't do anything wrong.
The government on the other hand is an entity with unlimited power and has a single purpose: to represent the people, maximize their overall welfare, and mediate the conflicts. I ask you, where is the need for secrecy in performing that task ?
There is an often repeated 'fact' these past few days, that government needs secrecy to be effective. Assange has gone 'too far' they say. It's often repeated, but there are rarely any arguments brought in favor. Quite the opposite, it's impossible for the government to be effective if it can operate in secrecy. It will always evolve into a corrupt conspiracy that looks out for it's own collective interest, not those they are representing. Again and again, history has shown that open societies maximize liberty, and that oppressive states operate by controlling fear and information. What's the point of holding elections if I don't know what the incumbents are doing, and what the opposition is planning ? That's a charade, not democracy.
One can argue that the military surely can't work without secrecy. The enemy will learn of the 'surprise' attack and flee. That may be true, but then again, the military is the exact antithesis of democracy. There's no vote when choosing the best attack target. I lead, you follow, I aim, you kill - that's how the army works. The military is a totalitarian institution and this maximizes it's effectiveness to kill.
It's you choice if you want to live in a secretive, militarized society as a pawn of the leaders, or as free individual who get's to decide democratically what the army should really protect him against.
Re:To think about it another way (Score:4, Insightful)
"So you ever have candid conversations with coworkers, friends, your spouse and so on about other people?"
Yep, and the co-worker usually goes to the person you talked about and says:
'You'll never believe who thinks you're an asshole!'
Re:To think about it another way (Score:5, Insightful)
I didn't get it as well - why Assange didn't make is stance all the way. It is actually very easy point to make – governments are screwing everyone over. Diplomats say they operate in the interest of their state and I believe them. But hat are those interests? If it is secret, then people cannot state their interests. Would US spying on British and vice versa be supported, if it was open? Most likely not.
This is basically government cheating on us. Maybe it is beneficial, but betrayal of our trust none the less. As for analogy – is it OK to cheat on your spouse, it they won't find out? (Opinions differ on this one as well).
To go even further, politeness in international relations is a devalued currency – everybody is polite and lies a lot. That is why everyone with half a brain don't believe what diplomats say. Do you know why lying is bad? It is because it shows complete disrespect for the other party involved. And this disrespect is painfully obvious. Not only that, but countries manipulate each other as if they are natural recourse or something.
When these things come to light, of course they are ugly and damage is done and whatnot, but if it can change the culture international relations to something less disturbing, I am all for it.
And to make a counter attack, I would have asked, what exact deals can only be made under secrecy. So far I have only generic claims and no explanations what so ever. And even if there are such deals, are they morally right.
About assholes. We live in the world of assholes, where they believe they are loved and whatnot. If Saudi Arabia would say out loud "Iran, we would feel much safer, if your country was ran by a mad cow", maybe Mahmoud Ahmadinejad would respect opinions outside his make believe world.
Maybe you should visit the assholes in your office and say "You are an asshole. People around you suffer direct mental pain." Or maybe you are ready to sacrifice well being of your employees for the well being of your own?
Re:To think about it another way (Score:4, Insightful)
As an example when we get a new student in at work, I've explained to them on various occasions when they were going to be dealing with someone who was an asshole, or someone who is incapable of following simple directions, and so on. I couldn't have those conversations if the person was listening in. I mean there isn't any way I could let a student know they are dealing with an asshole, no matter how diplomatic I was the asshole would get mad.
"Asshole" isn't exactly the height of diplomacy. You could try "fussy" or "particular" and instead of "incapable of following simple directions", try "creative" or "likes to have input".
It's actually very unprofessional to go around calling anyone an asshole in the workplace regardless of whether you face discipline for it. Chances are those students will remember you as "the guy who calls people assholes". When that pimply faced kid grows up he too may become what you classify as an asshole but with power over you. Or worse maybe he's not an "asshole" and just considers you too unprofessional to promote (or keep).
Re:To think about it another way (Score:4, Insightful)
And when said psychopathic asshole is or was hired by Kim-Jong Il? This isn't about a (comparatively) well-behaved US business--these are people dealing with lunatics who have never had to emotionally progress beyond being a teenager at best, and if their finger isn't on the trigger, they have the ear of those whose are, and they're just as crazy and touchy--tell them their diplomat is an asshole, flip a coin and see which way the wind is blowing--maybe they'll behead the diplomat, maybe they'll shell a bordering village.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not technically Assange that decides what leaks. It's people with access to the data who leak. Some people are painting this as an attack on diplomacy itself, but it's not and can never be. Assange doesn't have magical powers to shut down diplomatic dialogue as he is merely the messenger, not the message.
The story of the cables is very simple. A young, idealistic and (yes) rather naive young private who had been told his entire life that the USA was the light and the good in the world joined the military. There, he found he had access to everything. What he discovered is story after story of abuse of power shielded by secrecy, abuses that disgusted him. We know this because he said so himself. He decided to do something about it, and did.
If all there'd been in this archive was an occasional rude diplomat do you really think it would have leaked at all? Probably not. Manning didn't seem like an unhinged anarchist to me. He seemed like somebody angry about what he read, somebody who correctly thought others would agree.
The easiest way to protect yourself from Wikileaks is to ensure your organization doesn't do anything worth leaking. Simple as that.
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> The easiest way to protect yourself from Wikileaks is to ensure your
> organization doesn't do anything worth leaking. Simple as that.
Are you trying to say, "If your organization has done nothing wrong, you've nothing to fear from Wikileaks."??
Seems to me that my government has been saying that kind of thing to me, as they extend their surveillance powers.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Insightful)
The difference is that individuals deserve privacy, while government organizations don't.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:4, Funny)
A conservative could be getting raped by a grizzly bear, and they'd cheer it on as long as it meant that a hippie was going to get punched in the face.
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Or maybe it's just the recognition by grown-ups that Assange's action threaten not just individual government officials and policies, but all governments' ability to conduct diplomacy. Dumping 250,000 State Department cables onto the Internet isn't a, attack on a policy, official, or even a single government; it's an attack on the entire diplomatic system itself.
If diplomats fear they can't speak to their counterparts in confidence about significant concerns, diplomacy degenerates or stops. You might not li
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:5, Insightful)
However, with that said, I think Assange could have been much more careful about what he exposes to the public. Exposing information such as locations important to U.S. security is irresponsible, offers no real benefits, and just paints an easy target on the back of his head.
Re:Conservatives against Wikileaks.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Realize that easy targets often expose unbalanced attackers.
Going back to reading slashdot. (Score:5, Insightful)
[J]
Re:Going back to reading slashdot. (Score:4, Insightful)
It's about the past and from where I stand today nothing from any of the actions they have taken has changed my life in any way.
Don't fool yourself. The US is supposed to be THE paragon of freedom of speech. If this is the ideal (I'm not saying that it is), how are those other governments going to react in light of the fact that they don't purport to hold freedom of speech in such high regard?
Besides, I think that you just contradicted yourself:
I'd really like to comment on this but I afraid of the consequences.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
what's been interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
For me both this and the Afghan war wikileaks showed that journalism is working again. It seems that after the failures that led to Iraq the media really is doing a better job. Most everything in the leaks was rumored. Also its nice to see the USA is doing pretty much what it claims to be doing. Of course what's also interesting is no one is even attempting to deny these facts. Wikileaks has become the most reliable source we have on many topics. The government freak out is just what corporate America and then consumer America had to deal with a 15 and 10 years ago. Welcome to the internet age.
The most interesting topic is what this reveals about Pakistan and Afghanistan. Its time to level with everyone involved and I hope the congress has a vigerous debate about Afghan policy this time around.
Re:what's been interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, this is how that "vigorous" debate will go...
SENATOR ASSHAT: So, it seems the Afghan situation is far more complex than it initially seemed...
SENATOR LIEBERMAN: TERRORISM!
SENATOR STUPID: Right then, it's all settled. I'm off to lunch.
Re: Michael Geist (Score:4, Insightful)
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Additionally, it doesn't take a genius to see that what the US negotiators are likely looking at is what we've got in the US or more, which pretty strongly suggests that other nations would have to change their laws to suit our interests.
However, it is worth noting that the US exports a lot of IP of various sorts, and we have been ripped o
US Citizens - Contact Your Representatives (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell them that you support Wikileaks and that you want answers about what the cables reveal the US Goverment is doing. That what the US is doing against Wikileaks in response to this is wrong and unAmerican. The response by the US Government is embarrassing.. it confirms that we really do all of these backhanded actions that the cables say.
https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml [house.gov]
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm [senate.gov]
Re:US Citizens - Contact Your Representatives (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:US Citizens - Contact Your Representatives (Score:5, Interesting)
I’m already on my own no-fly list, and I’ll stay there until the TSA stops groping people to create a facade of security.
Re:US Citizens - Contact Your Representatives (Score:5, Insightful)
Saying that is like saying you won't support the 1st Amendment because Larry Flynt is a douchebag.
List of US facilities? (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think information should be made public for the sake of making it public. There are some things that are better off kept secret.
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Devil's advocate here...
If you were working in one of those facilities, wouldn't you want to know that your job entails a higher risk than elsewhere?
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Yet it provides information that anyone seeking to harm the US would find quite valuable.
Value is related to scarcity or difficulty of acquistion. How exactly is it difficult to acquire information that any of the items on the list are important to the US?
Glancing over the list for Canada there is nothing but a bunch of bridges and dams and industrial facilities, including nuclear facilities, that are obviously important. But vital? Or secret? Don't make me laugh.
It's for a cross reference (Score:4, Insightful)
It's an excellent cross reference to see what's really going on in any country on that list. If the US suddenly gives a shit about the Congo, check the news. The mine they rely on is now under threat. If next door there are millions of people being hacked to death with machetes, and we don't care, check the list. There is no useful resource we are exploiting. It's to illustrate that the United States does not operate on principle, but on self-interest, as every state does.
Unfortunately, Assange seems to be overplaying his hand. His only way out of prison time is to reveal something truly new and corrupt enough to get world outrage focused on the United States instead of himself. Then he will have the international support he needs to stay a free man.
He's either building up to this moment, or his arrogance has done him in.
Actually, another tactic may be that he's forcing them to breach the poison pill contract he has established. If he gets picked up and releases the encrypted file keys, it could unleash holy terror worldwide as all of the information they have redacted so far is suddenly unleashed. If there's enough in there to cause a slew of double agents to be exposed internationally, then he'll again have a better chance of staying alive if not free, and he will have collapsed the covert policies that have been running the world since the 20th Century.
What troubles me most (Score:5, Interesting)
"Verging on the criminal" (Score:5, Insightful)
Former UK Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind said WikiLeaks' actions were "verging on the criminal".
Since when do we arrest people for doing things that are almost illegal?
Swiss account was not frozen. It was closed. (Score:5, Informative)
offtopic: slishdigest (Score:3)
I liked the slashdigest format. I hope it will catch on.
Like the cell-phone ad "Really?" (Score:3)
Really? How is it that we are more interested in taking down Wikileaks founder Assange than say... Osama Bin Laden, who *actually* is a terrorist?
Why is it that anyone the USA doesn't like gets branded as a terrorist? Doesn't that worry you? How far away is the day that free speach is labeled a terrorist act?
I mean, seriously -- right now in China, you go to jail for speaking out against the government and we then proclaim that China isn't "free".
But in the "free" USA, if you speak out against the government, Amazon disowns you, the government *wants* to arrest you and your website is taken down. hrrmmmm. While China may be more extreme, the basic policies between the USA and China are not all that different. Which is to say, if you're a rabble-rouser, or you in any way embarass us, we'll take you down.
I am concered that I see posts on slashdot saying that Assange needs to be treated as a traitor. Go after Robert Novack first. If the media were doing its job, we wouldn't need Wikileaks.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
It'd be nice if Julian could WikiLeak his own sexual assault information. As far as I've seen he's said it's a frame job but admits having sex with two women. Why not just have this out in the open and not leave people worried that backing WikiLeaks is backing a rapist?
Put what "out into the open" exactly, his penis? Unless he video-taped that time he had sex there is nothing for him to leak. I doubt he has the prosecutor's documents; he and his lawyer didn't actually know the details of the accusation until the Nov. 18th hearing for the international warrant, and I find it hard that the prosecutor would suddenly become forthcoming about this information. He offered to cooperate while he was there but the charges were "withdrawn". The Swedish authorities said they've been "trying to contact Mr Assange, but have not yet been able to" while Wiki-Leaks says "No-one here has been contacted by Swedish police". This would be an easy charge for the police to refute if they had made efforts to contact Wiki-Leaks.
In short I don't think the burden of proof here is on Mr. Assange. I think the burden of proof is on the Swedish Police and INTERPOL to explain why an organization usually reserved for mass murders and other war criminals is suddenly issuing a "Red Notice" for a suspected rape case, even before the appeals process in Sweden is exhausted.
Re:ehh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ehh (Score:5, Funny)
Ummmm... the sexual assault wasn't against women, it was against the US government... and it really really hurt. and its still hurting and still ongoing. I can see Julian likes it slow....
i dont know which idiot modded you insightful (Score:5, Insightful)
second, one prosecutor dropped the case, another prosecutor, mysteriously, DESPITE it has been out of its jurisdiction and already handled, reopened the case. then, they had issued a warrant for assange TO GET HIS TESTIMONY. not to arrest him, not to do anything else. but interestingly, despite they were obliged to contact assange by swedish law, and the exact location of assange was known to entire swedish judiciary, that prosecutor's office had opted out to VIOLATE swedish law, by not contacting assange. they just directly went to press, saying that we issued a warrant to have him come here and issue a testimony.
then, interpol took that, and turned that testimony warrant to an ARREST warrant.
in the meantime, fox news and all those other news channels in america, who are used to fool morons, has been pumping up 'rape' bullshit to morons. the morons who believed them of course.
and now today someone comes up saying that rape charges came out of swedish 'police department'. wow. judiciary in sweden, apparently changes day to day, by what bullshit fox serves americans.
the 2 idiots who modded you up, please hand in your
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
IMHO: "A list of stuff that people can blow up if they want to screw with us", is something that legitimately deserves to be hidden from everyone but the guy dispatching people to guard that stuff.
The things in question aren't secret by any means. Anyone in the countries in question would know they're important infrastructure. For example, in Canada, they list stuff like our nuclear power plants (Which provide about half of Ontario's power and exports significant amounts to the northeast US), various bridges and international rail crossings, major border crossings, natural gas and oil pipelines (Lots of which connect to the US), several dams and hydroelectric plants, some mines (germanium, graphite, iron, niobium, and nickle), and various factories, including ones producing medical supplies such as vaccines (specifically polio and influenza), blood plasma, and weapon components, and the Chalk River nuclear laboratory, which produces about 1/3rd of the world's medical isotopes.
Basically anyone in Canada who sat down and thought about it for a bit would come up with most of those as places that would cause widespread disruption if you took them out of operation.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
I tend to agree. On the BBC news this morning some twerp was going on about how they've revealed the place where teh transatlantic intartubes enter the British mainland. Odd thing is, I'm pretty sure this was shown some time ago on an episode of the documentary series "Coast" - on the BBC[1].
Likewise mention was made of key pharmaceutical facilities. I'm sure these can be easily gleaned from such classified sources as Companies House, land registry, yellow pages etc.
Fact is, anybody who could actually be bothered to get off their arse and blow these things up is sufficiently motivated to find out where they are. There's precisely zero people willing and able to do it who's being thwarted by the inability to find out where the fucking hell the targets are. Anyone who says otherwise is a berk ,a liar, or a lying berk.
[1] I think it was somewhere in Cornw@i*(0h
k.
no carrier
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Everyone with any knowledge of history.
TIME's Person of the year 2010 contest (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Interesting)
As seen with East Germany, in the end the Government can't win over a determined people. Just a question as to whether the people will wake up in time while there is still something to save. ...
How long until the US People remember the constitution and their founding fathers' courage and ideas! Get up and let your "representatives" know how you feel about the "Great Chinese Firewall" and censoring of websites in the US
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Insightful)
absolutely. you have every right to pray in government buildings or schools.
in fact in the case of schools the courts have consistently ruled that students' expressions of religious views through prayer or otherwise cannot be abridged unless they can be shown to cause substantial disruption in the school.
What you have absolutely no right to do is pressure other peoples children or other adults into praying in public buildings.
it's really easy to understand.
but religious nutjobs who just want to force everyone elses children to pray to whatever imaginary friend they happen to believe in love to lie and pretend it's banned.
similarly you can pray all you like in court but forcing anyone at all to take part or making it part of the official proceedings as if the religion is backed by the government isn't ok.
too bad the religious idiots are convinced that they can push their religion into official government affairs to try to get the government to back their religion over others or force the symbols or prayers of their own faith onto others.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Governments, overall, are not innovative, and tend to make two mistakes. One to assume that the world still works as a zero sum game. With the advance of technology and the free market, this is no longer true. In spite of this governments still insist on using tools that assume the zero sum, such as war. Huge deficits have been built up over the past 10 years due to war expenditures at expense of the free market. Although private enterprises do thrive in war, these tend to be government proxies, such as Haliburton, rather than free agents.
The second thing governments do, which is more relavent to the current situation, is security through obscurity. At one time this was a reasonable endeavor, in our process oriented world it is not reasonable. Profit cannot be dependent on the arbitrage of knowing something a little before someone else knows it. Power cannot be maintained by simply keeping information from other people.
These are both pre-democracy pre-free-market ideals that are too long held by the elite. At most they want an ancient republic where only they hold power, and the majority is held hostage by the fact they do not have the secrets of power rather than a modern democracy where the freedom of information and commerce insure the most efficient use of resources so that the maximum number of people benifit.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Interesting)
I saw an interview with Steve Johnson [wikipedia.org] in which he said at the end of his book _Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation_ he attempted a survey of private vs. public sector innovation and concluded they're about even, or possibly government-funded ideas have a slight edge.
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Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Insightful)
I very much doubt that they'll unleash the insurance file(s) (there are several) if Julian Assange is arrested in the UK, or even if is extradited to Sweden. While the so-called rape allegations appear to be without merit, it's still being handled -- vaguely -- within the confines of law and reason. I think the insurance is reserved for more extreme occurrences.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
> I think the insurance is reserved for more extreme occurrences.
Like when he takes off for Sweden...and doesn't land there.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Informative)
He should flee to the Pakistani side of the Afghan border. Seems a pretty safe place for fugitives.
held to a higher standard ? (Score:3, Funny)
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Why is it a good if someone else says it to you?
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When it comes to international politics, everyone is doing something wrong. It's just the biggest guy gets to do it most.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Interesting)
I kind of wish I was in a psychology course during all this...it would be interesting to examine the reactions of governments and officials to Assange. Some of the response seems like its been ripped straight from a movie or book, with thinly veiled attempts at painting the man as a terrorist. The strength of the rhetoric seems directly proportional to the level of embarrassment groked from different leaked cables.
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is this Wikileaks day? (Score:5, Insightful)
My amateur psychologist impression is that many quoted officials are taking the "5 year old with tantrum" route. Slightly more refined than what terrible-two toddlers do, but still at kindergarten level. This is not meant as a snipe, but just an observation (not a flattering one of course, but no point in blaming mirror if face looks ugly).
Ya think? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm waiting to read the news "Julian Assange has been arrested"
I think it is more likely we will hear about his tragic fatal auto accident, or suicide by 41 self administered hammer-blows to the head.
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That would make him a Martyr... The US government does not want that.
He will be arrested, paraded through our kangaroo courts, found guilty as a terrorist, made to look like the ultimate villain to the public and left to rot in a prison somewhere.
Re:Ya think? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it's more likely that his arrest will be widely publicized in the media whereas his acquittal will be swept under the rug.
The common men on the street will think he's a criminal/terrorist and the establishment will have won.
But it will be a pyrrhic victory because 100 other wikileaks-type sites will follow in their footsteps.
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That would make him a Martyr... The US government does not want that.
They don't care. They kill people every day.
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With the leaks about Putin, i have expect him to be killed with polonium. Maybe a Mossad assassination.
The USA doesn't actually have to lay a finger on Julian Assange, Just about every European leader would like is head right about now. He can go to Ecuador or Australia. Anywhere else and his visa's will be mysteriously not accepted.
Of course they may equally be pissed at the USA, but then again I have yet to see any damning evidence of evil that Julian keeps saying is in there. In fact the scary part
Re:Ya think? (Score:4, Insightful)
Hillary doing her job properly?!? Our diplomats are not spies. Forcing them to do spies' work compromises their ability to do diplomatic work. There is a reason we have diplomats in the State Department and spies in separate agencies like the CIA and the NSA.
Now, given that you think that is a good idea, why would you find it "scary" and shudder-inducing that Hillary Clinton is doing what you see as a good job? Are you simply rabidly anti Hillary?
Re:Ya think? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, but there is still a line between diplomat and spy, and we crossed it. What we did was not normal for diplomats, and if any other country's diplomats were caught doing those things to us, they would be expelled from the US.
Re:Said it once... (Score:5, Insightful)
Wikileaks didn't release anything, they published information that was released to them by someone else. It should be noted that there has never been a case of someone successfully being prosecuted in the US for publishing leaked documents. The leaker, the one who actually violated an oath and removed those documents and gave them to someone else, that person should be punished. I wouldn't even argue against a treason case being brought against him or her. But trying to punish what is essentially a journalist, publishing information received from a source, is a very, very slippery slope for the US to start down.
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Re:Said it once... (Score:5, Interesting)
If you publish, you're a journalist. You may not be a -popular- journalist, but a journalist none the less. What are the professional requirements for being a journalist? Nothing.
Re:Said it once... (Score:5, Informative)
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A case recently where an American, Lawrence Franklin, leaked classified documents to Israel via AIPAC.
Ah yes, I remember that. It was actual espionage, bona-fide - rather than publishing the documents, they were leaked in secret to a foreign nation.
Re:Said it once... (Score:5, Informative)
More importantly, it was only Pfc. Bradley Manning who leaked the information (and thus broke any applicable laws). Julian Assage/Wikileaks only published it afterward.
Re:"Bullying And Manipulating" (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would anybody be surprised that the USA bullies or manipulates other countries for its own benefit? Its what any top power has done, and what any aspiring power wants to do.
Considering the US is the richest, mightiest, most powerful and most influential country in the history of world, its more of a surprise it hasn't used more of its powers to control the world. The rest of the world should be glad the United States is such a benevolent power and overall force for good in the world.
"In the history of the world?" Uh, how are you measuring that? I can think of at least three other Empires that, by any reasonable standards, have exercised far more control over a far greater geographic area.
I think that most parts of Central and South America have a very different view of the US's benevolence than you do. We have a sixty plus year history down there of overthrowing democratically elected leaders that our corporate overlords don't like. We don't just meddle to spread democracy, we also meddle to protect our economic interests. At the barest whiff that some country in our sphere of influence might be thinking about nationalizing anything, we send in the CIA and military advisers at the very least.
Re:Summary is inaccurate (Score:5, Insightful)
The article seems to be detailing diplomacy as usual.
I hear this a lot, and I find it overly cynical.
Imagine an article describing someone being brutally murdered. Picture that this person is a black twelve year old male. Imagine now that this happened in the following places:
A) New York City
B) Mobile Alabama
C) Darfur
Which of those locations match the expectation, and which do not? Statistically the odds of violent death would vary by location, but would it ever simply be 'detailing business as usual'?
Because with the cables I think this is the most important part. Few people genuinely believed that the CIA was doing so much evil as grabbing completely innocent people and rushing them off to torture and interrogation, but here we have the cable confirming not only that this was true, but that we suppressed their investigation of it. That's MORE evil than the first accusation!
And what about being complicit in murder?? Does this genuinely shock no one?
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I don't know about that; I think the Clone Wars TV series gets it pretty right: the galactic Senate keeps getting intimidated, attacked, interfered with by circumstance, and generally manipulated by the Sith. It seems pretty realistic to me.
Re:Close your Amazon now! (Score:5, Informative)
Amazon doesn't own Paypal, eBay or Skype. eBay owns Paypal, but no longer controls even a majority of Skype. Skype is also in the process of being completely spun off with it's own IPO.
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Apparently they still do, but you have to pay crazy amounts of money to keep them.
Re:Bullied and manipulated other countries? (Score:4, Insightful)